The removal of Gen. Randy George and other high-ranking professionals underscores a drive to politicize the military and bypass strategic dissent. Experts warn that a ground incursion faces “operational suicide” due to Iran’s formidable FPV drone arsenal and asymmetric capabilities, threatening a protracted war of attrition despite executive optimism.
The dismissal that tells the story
Gen. Randy George, the US Army’s Chief of Staff, was removed from his post by War Secretary Pete Hegseth and ordered to retire immediately last week. Ostensibly, the sacking seemed like one more entry on a long list of Pentagon house cleanings. It was not.
George, a four-star infantry officer, had served more than four decades in uniform, with combat deployments in the Gulf War, the Iraq War, and Afghanistan. He was precisely the general you want advising a president contemplating his most consequential military decision: whether to invade Iran or not.
It was no coincidence that his ouster followed the President’s address on Iran by a single day. By telegraphing intensified strikes and a three-week window for resolution, the administration turned a personnel change into a strategic signal.
The pattern: Purging the professionals
George’s dismissal was not an isolated event. It was the latest in a systematic dismantling of senior military leadership. General George became the latest of more than a dozen high-ranking officers dismissed during President Trump’s second term. The earlier round of firings included Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the Navy’s top uniformed officer; Gen. Jim Slife, the No. 2 leader at the Air Force; and Gen. Charles “CQ” Brown Jr., who was removed as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs.
Also fired alongside George were the Army’s chief of chaplains, Maj. Gen. William Green Jr., and the commander of Army Transformation and Training Command, Gen. David Hodne.
What was the administration’s formal rationale for removing George? Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell offered only that he was grateful for George’s “decades of service,” giving no reason for the abrupt wartime departure. However, CBS News quoted a source saying Hegseth made the move because he wanted someone who would implement his and President Trump’s vision for the Army. An anonymous official didn’t mince words: “Why fire the man responsible for protecting our troops in the middle of a war zone?”
The question being avoided: Ground invasion
As the Iran War stretches past its first month, time is running out for President Trump to wrap up his four-to-six-week war on schedule, and experts warn that any ground campaign would be “very costly” in lives, money, and materiel.
The military calculus against a ground war is not partisan. It is professional. Any ground incursion into Iran risks losses from Iran’s drone and missile arsenal, direct and indirect ground fire, roadside IEDs, and suicide bombings. Iran maintains a formidable arsenal of first-person-view (FPV) drones, the same low-cost, high-lethality weapons that have inflicted staggering casualties on the Russian military in Ukraine.
Operational suicide: Separating fact from viral narrative
The timing of the firings, against the backdrop of speculation about a US ground invasion of Iran, has raised pointed questions about how Hegseth handles military advice that runs counter to his wishes on the war front.
One political observer noted: “It’s likely that experienced generals are telling Hegseth his Iran war plans are unworkable, disastrous, and deadly.” That assessment aligns with what military analysts have said publicly for weeks.
The Strategic Reality Iran Is Counting On
Iran, for its part, is making no effort to minimize what a ground war would look like. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told NBC News that Iran is not afraid of a ground invasion and that it would be “a big disaster” for American troops.
Tehran has issued a defiant rebuttal to Washington’s optimism. A senior Iranian security official told CNN that Iran alone will determine the war’s endgame, signaling a readiness for a protracted war of attrition that flies in the face of U.S. claims that the conflict is nearing its conclusion. Media outlets linked to Iran’s armed forces also publicised a volunteer registration campaign allowing participants as young as 12 to sign up for security and support roles.
The economic dimension is equally sobering.
The generals and principles of war
The tension is a classic American image: high-ranking officers pushing the boundaries of dissent and commanders-in-chief with little patience for questioning.
The gravity of the current moment is unprecedented: the United States is locked in a conflict in which the commander-in-chief has signalled a readiness to bypass the laws of war, even as veteran officials capable of restraining such impulses are being systematically purged.
Five former U.S. secretaries of defense warned in an open letter that the pattern of dismissals raises “troubling questions about the administration’s desire to politicize the military and to remove legal constraints on the president’s power.”
Removing Randy George did not eliminate his argument. Iran’s terrain did not change when his retirement papers were signed. The mines around Kharg Island did not disappear. The drones did not disappear. History does not remember the presidents who listened to their generals as weak. It remembers the ones who didn’t as reckless.

